Someone should try to make the worst movie ever and campaign it as that. I'd like to see how far it gets.
Several people had that same idea before. One notable example is Birdemic, seeing how a lot of people know about this movie, it obviously succeeded.
For me the one that immediately comes to mind is Dragonball Evolution. I'd heard it was bad. But it couldn't be that bad, could it? Well it could. The DB fanboy in me forced itself to watch it to the end, but each minute I died a little from the inside . And they could've done so much more with it
Probably a tie between Salo(120 days of Sodom) by Paolo Pasolini because it was utterly disgusting in showing acts of unmentionable gore and finally murder on innocent children (and to say it's hailed as a cinema classic and pure art...), and the Human Centipede series because of obvious reasons. I had to format my PC after watching these on it because I was repulsed by human beings' imagination to create such monstrosities. If only I can bleach my brain of the memories too.
Huh... That's actually true. Battle: Los Angeles abides by that rule as well. Regarding Battlefield: Earth. The acting, effects, story, cinematography are all so bad that they are hilarious. And it becomes even funnier when you realize that John Travolta actually honored his Scientology cult leader Ron Hubbard with producing and starring in this movie (it is based on his novel). Oh, and what an honor it was hahah
Maybe it's Red Sonja (1985). I remember that being incredibly terrible. Though I guess it crossed into "so bad it's good" territory. Maybe.
I enjoyed both Signs and Daredevil. The Netflix series pissed all over the film from a great height, but the film was still enjoyable for me.
I just saw Birdman, which has to be a contender... all the more because critics decided to love it. It thinks it's the cleverest thing ever made, and it's not. But the acting was good. It's probably not the worst. I guess I just have to work toward healing and moving on. (It will be a slow journey, but it will feel quicker than watching that film.) I think I'll go with The Haunting (1999 remake). The fact that it still sticks in my mind says something. (Oh, and I kind of liked The Fountain. Not awesome, but it had something going for it.)